The masculine definite article 'the'; the masculine personal pronoun 'it, him'; or the masculine measurement terms 'a, an' and 'per'* may be English equivalents of 'Le'. It's pronounced 'luh'.
As a last name, another possibility is 'Lé'. The accent may have dropped off over time in Another Country, another culture, another language. It's a masculine noun that means 'width'. It's pronounced 'leh'.
*For example, 'le poids' may mean 'the pound, pound, per or by the pound, or a pound [in the sense of the price a pound, the price for each pound].
Le nom in French is "the name" in English.
Le dernier matin in French means "the last morning" in English.
There is no word in French that is "le martin". (Martin is proper name in French as in English, but it does not take an article.) If you meant to ask about "le matin", it means, "the morning".
The Tricolour (le tricolore)
Est le... in French means "Is the..." in English.
Le pied in French is "the foot" in English.
"The white mount" as a common name and "The White Mountain" as a proper name are English equivalents of the French masculine singular phrase le mont blanc. The pronunciation will be "luh moh blaw" in French.
"Le clair" is "The clear one". "Le clair de lune" is "Moonshine".
Le ciel in French means "the sky" in English.
Le coq in French means "the rooster" in English.
Savage is of early English origin and derives from the old French meaning wild and uncontrolled. As a derivation from French, the first recorded name was Robert le Sauuage, in the south of England in 1198
Scientific name: Rasbora aurotaenia,French name: Rasbora pâle,English name: Pale rasbora